Enel

Enel describes itself as "Italy's largest power company and Europe’s second listed utility by installed capacity. It produces and sells electricity and gas across Europe, North and Latin America." Following its takeover of the Spanish utility Endesa and Acciona, Enel states on its website that, as of December 2007, it has "a presence in 21 countries with 75,500 MW of generating capacity".

Of its total installed generating capacity, the company generated 67,334 million kilowatt hours from thermal sources. Of this, 30,171 million kilowatt hours or 41.9% was from coal-fired power stations, a 4% increase over the previous year.

History
Enel was formerly the Italian government owned electricity generation, distribution and transmission utility. In 1999 the Italian government began to deregulate the electricity market and privatize the utility.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration states that "in 2000, the Italian government forced Enel to sell 27 percent of its generating capacity, and to that end, Enel created three new, independent generating companies: Elettrogen, Eurogen, and Interpower." Elettrogen was subsequently bought by Endesa Italia, Eurogen bought by Edison and and a consortium of Belgium's Electrabel, Italy's Acea, and Interpower was bought by a consortium of Electrabel, Acea, and Energia Italia bought Interpower and later renamed it Tirreno Power.

The electricity transmission grid is owned by Terna, which was previously a wholly-owned subsidiary of Enel. However, Enel now only has a 5% stake in the company.

CCS plants
On March 1, 2011, Enel said its new pilot carbon capture and storage (CCS) plant, the Brindisi facility, will be used as a blueprint for a larger €1 billion ($1.38 billion) facility to be built in Porto Tolle. Enel's Brindisi facility will be used over the next three years to test additives and solvents, including plans for a larger facility in Porto Tolle. The Brindisi project aims to "capture" 8,000 metric tons of greenhouse gases a year, while the Porto Tolle facility targets 1 million tons a year. Porto Tolle, in northeast Italy, is set to be converted to a coal-fired plant from fuel oil, with an installed capacity of about 2,000 megawatts, at €2 billion. The CCS demonstration facility will have an additional EUR$1 billion investment.

Enel also signed a memorandum of understanding in November 2010 with the Korean ElectricPower Corp., or Kepco, to test CCS. Enel is also tapping the Chinese CCS market through a 2009 deal looking at a 600 megawatt power plant with China's Huaneng. Enel and China's fourth-largest oil producer, Shaanxi Yanchang Petroleum Group are also studying injecting CO2 into an oil field as a way of boosting output.

Enel and Eni SpA, Italy's biggest oil and natural gas company, will jointly transport and store CO2 in Eni's onshore Cortemaggiore gas field. Injection at Cortemaggiore is expected to take place by the end of 2011.

Contact details
Website: http://www.enel.com/en/index.aspx

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